HP Firebird 803 Voodoo DNA
David GHP and its boutique/luxe division Voodoo deserve serious praise for what they’ve accomplished with the Firebird 803. Taking a mix of laptop and desktop guts, juicing it up with high-end components, cooling it with liquid goo instead of noisy fans, and encasing it inside a gorgeous, curvy shell that would make most industrial designers weep with envy, the Firebird is a testament to how the envelope can be pushed in the typically boring PC world.
It’s also a veritable bargain, priced at $2,100, fully loaded.





















Performance



You might easily be fooled by the Aluratek Internet Radio Alarm Clock’s dowdy, low-tech design. It’s easy to dismiss as one of those cheap, gray market knockoffs usually found on drug store appliance shelves. But the beauty of this feature-laden radio lives beneath its skin. Yeah it’s an alarm clock. Yeah, it’s an FM tuner. And yeah, true to its not-so-creative moniker it’s also an Internet radio with access to more than 11,000 channels around the world. But like those late-night infomercials (the kind you might half expect to see this radio advertised on) we gotta say: “But wait, there’s more.”
Record labels, hammered by ever plummeting CD sales, see a ray of sunshine in the recent minor renaissance in vinyl records whose sales and production continue to steadily expand. The reason for this 33 1/3 RPM nostalgia? The feeding of a demand from a growing minority of audio geeks who have been bitching about the cold sound of digital reproduction since the first compact disc was released. (And don’t even get them started on the sound quality of MP3s.) Records, they claim, have warmer, more natural sound. Okay, so what’s this gotta do with Sony’s Digital Noise Cancellation Headphones? That all depends on how you like the sound reproduction of the music you listen to: Analog warm or digital cool.
Prices aren’t the only thing dropping in HDTV land these days. Due to some larger, backlight-banishing OLED sets on the horizon, it’s ex-lax and Ephedrine time for LCDs.







